FYI -- Ron

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of James Byrne
Sent: Sunday, January 06, 2013 10:11 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: Natasha Andronova; Philip J Rasch
Subject: [SHS-friends] INVITATION - Chapman Conference: Communicating
Climate Science, 8-13 June 2013 at Snow Mountain Ranch in Granby, Colorado.

 


Dear colleagues and friends of Steve,

As a followup to Natasha's email last fall, we are writing with more
information on the Chapman Climate Communication Conference.  

I did not know Steve Schneider as well as many of you.  I was on his list of
Canadian friends.  He would write with a good Canada climate story ...  or a
good Canadian joke.   He could have a field day with the current far right
wing anti-environment government in Canada.   

Steve and I had begun work on a Chapman Climate Conference in January 2010.
Having Steve involved made for success in any academic venture so when he
sent this note, I was thrilled  ...

"Sure Jim, happy to join in--I ran 2 Chapman Conferences on Gaia over past
25 years, they know me well, for better and/or for worse. Sarah knows my
schedule etc. Bye from World Economic Forum Davos--expect climate change,
we#'d better learn how to adapt where possible, Steve"

Well with the leadership cooperation of Natasha and Phil, and many others,
the Chapman Climate Conference is now a reality.  

NOW we need your help, and the world needs our help, to address climate
change action(s) 2013 onward.  Your advice, ideas, thoughts, are much
appreciated.   Please bring this conference to the attention of anyone who
may have capabilities, knowledge, research, applications. solutions that we
should know about and support through the Chapman.  Apologies for cross
postings.  We will establish a discussion mechanism in the near future.  

Please plan to attend and to submit your abstracts before February 5, 2013. 
 

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

American Geophysical Union Chapman Conference

Communicating Climate Science: A Historic Look to the Future

June 8-13, 2013, Snow Mountain Ranch, Granby, CO, USA

The AGU Chapman Conference (AGUCC) will focus on communication about climate
science to all sectors of society.  The Climate Change Community must move
forward on multiple pathways to convey climate change research, mitigation
and adaptation plans and policies and technologies to policy makers,
planners, and society at all levels.  As climate science has developed over
time, there has been a significant shift in relations between the science
and political aspects thereof; where previously the development of the
science was exclusively prioritized, now the focus lies in communicating the
science to society. It is imperative that we determine an appropriate
balance between these two elements, ensuring that neither is too shallow or
deep. 

Broader impact: The AGUCC plans to invite key speakers and discussion
leaders from major climate and social science groups, journalists,
communicators, policymakers, and representatives of public opinion. The
conference will begin with a historical perspective on how climate science
was communicated in the past and transition to a discussion about how more
effective communication strategies may be developed in the future. The
conference will also consider the importance of more coherent, uniform and
consistent messaging by scientific societies and agencies in delivering
knowledge about climate change.

Immediate Outcomes:  (1) Participants will be encouraged to submit short
discussion papers to a refereed proceedings volume and/or a special section
of a scientific journal.  (2) We are planning a textbook in which the main
results of the AGUCC will be presented, and (3) a documentary film and
education website will be produced based on interviews with conference
participants, including a section conveying the conference findings (see
further discussion below). 

The conference is being held in honor of the contributions of prominent
climate scientists Bert Bolin and Stephen Schneider.

Content of the Education documentary and website: The presentations will
feature four levels of discussion summarizing results from the AGUCC about:
(i)  the state of knowledge about climate change, impacts, mitigation and
adaptation globally. (ii)  key regional issues within North America (iii)
international locales where climate change is creating immediate critical
challenges and risks; (iv) solutions to our climate change challenges.  This
work is funded by the Social Science and Humanities Research Council Canada
under the leadership of James Byrne, a co-convener of the meeting.  The goal
the documentary project  is to communicate climate change science and
solutions from the research community to society.  

 

Overall Objectives

1.     Review and analyze historical and current communication ways and
means for climate science; 

2.     Identify education resources and capacity currently available and
gaps in the resources and capacity that must be addressed;

3.     Identify the communications and education bottlenecks preventing
actions on GHG emission reductions and the transition to a sustainable
energy future;

4.     Identify multiple communication strategies for conveying climate
science, and mitigation and adaptation programs, polices and technologies to
policy makers and governments at all levels;

5.     Explore strategies for promoting the use of accurate and engaging
educational materials in classrooms, and for public and community outreach;

6.     Identify and reach out to wide-ranging distribution networks for
getting education materials to many levels of society in North America; 

7.     Identify resource needs and sources for addressing climate science
communication and education;

8.     Identify current and required resources and capacity for addressing
critical needs in science, mitigation and adaptation. 

 

The Climate Change Community must identify ways and means to better
communicate policies, programs and practices for widespread action on
climate change communication, and pathways leading to national and global
actions on climate change mitigation and adaptation. The AGUCC will prepare
a summary document for release soon after the meeting.  The document will
describe conference outcomes, and will be distributed to any and all
stakeholders and interested parties. 

 The abstract submission deadline is February 5, 2013.  To submit an
abstract and/or register please visit the conference website:
<http://chapman.agu.org/climatescience/communicating-climate-science/>
http://chapman.agu.org/climatescience/communicating-climate-science/

 Looking forward to seeing you at the AGUCC in Colorado.  Thank you on
behalf of the Program Committee, 

 Natasha Andronova, Philip Rasch, James Byrne

AGUCC Co-conveners

 

-- 
James M. Byrne, PhD
University of Lethbridge
Regarding climate change, silence is not golden, it is yellow. 

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